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Metro to add new services to wring cash from parks

Dog wash stations and event tent rentals are just some of the money-making ideas Metro Vancouver intends to explore as it opens up its regional parks to more commerce.

Dog wash stations and event tent rentals are just some of the money-making ideas Metro Vancouver intends to explore as it opens up its regional parks to more commerce. Regional district officials have considered more than 100 possible ventures to turn a profit in area parks while adding new services.

"We have to start thinking outside the box in terms of revenue," parks committee chair Gayle Martin said. "We can't always go to taxpayers for the things we want. This would help us enhance other parts of the parks with the revenue."

Work is already underway to launch a tent rental service that will charge market rates for the rental of event tents in Metro parks. "It could cost us initially $100,000 to invest in a tent inventory but in the first year we're looking at a $60,000 payback," Martin said. "So it's paid back in a year and some months."

Dog obedience training is to be tested this summer as a pilot project in Pacific Spirit Regional Park and is to be offered in six regional parks next year, turning an expected annual profit of $28,000.

Over the longer term, the region could develop specialized dog services such as business-run washing stations that Martin said have proven popular in dog friendly parks in parts of the U.S. One San Francisco-area park is home to Mudpuppy's Tub and Scrub, which offers highly pampered full service or do-it-yourself dog baths as well as toys and treats, with a specialty coffee cafe next door.

"I could see it happening in Pacific Spirit, where we get a lot of dog walkers," Martin said. Dog waste could also be collected and turned into fertilizer for sale, a staff report said.

Metro also plans to start charging $3.99 per download for the next version of its currently free iParks Explorer park info app, which staff estimate could earn the region more than $80,000 over the next year based on a projected 30,000 downloads.

Metro's parks now generate enough revenue to offset nine per cent of their operating costs and the regional district wants to boost that to 15 per cent over the next 10 years. Other ideas rated promising by Metro staff include upgrading picnic shelters to more deluxe all-weather structures that could be reservable for a fee.

Ideas like ziplines or pay-to-play water parks were considered by staff but didn't make their short list.

Some of the services could be run directly by Metro Vancouver, while others might be contracted to private firms. Various private companies are already pitching their own ideas for business ventures in Metro parks, Martin said.

Park-goers could count on basic use of parks remaining free. Nobody would have to pay to go to the beach, walk a trail, park their car or use a toilet or other basic infrastructure.

Revenue from parks also comes from access fees charged for the TV and film industry, rental houses, agricultural licences and communication tower leases.